WPF binding update notification for nested property when parent property changes

"The class Car is not implementing INotifyPropertyChanged. But I'm not changing the property Manufacturer, I change the MyCarProperty property, and so I expect that the OnNotifyPropertyChanged event will trigger the value update?"

Nope, it won't trigger the value update a level down. Bindings don't listen to property changes for an entire path, they listen only to the object that they're bound to.

I see a couple options off the top of my head (in order of my preference when I run into this):

  1. Bind to the car, not the sub property, and create a data template that displays what you want out of it.
  2. Manually kick the binding by calling UpdateTarget on it's BindingExpression when you need to.

I know it looks like there's a lot more to learn on the data template route, but I promise you that data templates will prove vastly more powerful, scalable, maintainable, and useful than manually kicking bindings as you work more in WPF. (Also, once you understand them, I think they're actually less work than manually kicking bindings).

Good luck!


The accepted answer explains how to handle the case where a sub-property on a Binding Source is changed and you wish to update the view - which is not what the question is asking. WPF will in fact respond to changes from many levels down, so long as you are notifying changes for any properties being changed within the specified path.

As for this:

"The class Car is not implementing INotifyPropertyChanged. But I'm not changing the property Manufacturer, I change the MyCarProperty property, and so I expect that the OnNotifyPropertyChanged event will trigger the value update?"

WPF handles this already.

In your example, ViewModel is the Binding Source. When you set MyCarProperty (firing the NotifyPropertyChanged event), WPF will re-evaluate the Binding Target Value using the Binding Path for the new Binding Source object - updating your view with the new Manufacturer.

I have tested this with a simple WPF app - it also holds true for very deeply nested Paths:

https://pastebin.com/K2Ct4F0F

<!-- When MyViewModel notifies that "MyCarProperty" has changed, -->
<!-- this binding updates the view by traversing the given Path -->
<TextBlock Text="{Binding Path=MyCarProperty.Model.SuperNested[any][thing][you][want][to][try][and][access].Name}" />

Tags:

C#

Wpf

Binding

Mvvm